Tools and devices developed for specific, often temporary purposes—jury-rigged fixes, makeshift solutions, one-off inventions that solve a particular problem and then are discarded. Ad hoc technologies are the opposite of engineered products: they're not designed for mass production, not tested for reliability, not intended to last. They're what you build when the thing you need doesn't exist and you need it now. Duct tape and paperclip solutions, software patches that fix one bug, temporary structures that become permanent—all are ad hoc technologies. They're ugly, fragile, and brilliant in their context. They're the technologies of making do.
Ad Hoc Technologies Example: "He built an ad hoc technology to keep his laptop cool—a folded paper wedge and a desk fan. It worked perfectly, looked ridiculous, and would never be sold. Ad hoc technology had done its job: solved a problem, right now, with what was at hand. When the fan died, he'd build something else."
by Dumu The Void February 17, 2026
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